Status
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
HIV replication in resting CD4 cells is so minimal that anti-HIV drugs often fail to destroy the virus in these cells. Enfuvirtide, also known as T-20, is a type of anti-HIV drug called a fusion inhibitor. The purpose of this study is to test the ability of a T-20-enhanced treatment regimen to decrease the number of resting CD4 cells that become infected with HIV.
Full description
While current HIV treatment with combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) has reduced morbidity and mortality, it does not eradicate or cure HIV infection. A possible explanation for this failure is the persistence of virus in long-lived reservoirs. Resting memory CD4 cells have been proposed as providing a cellular reservoir. Most patients who initiate ART during chronic HIV-1 infection do not experience a detectable reduction in HIV in the latent reservoir; this may be due to low levels of ongoing viral replication that maintains the resting CD4 cell reservoir. Increasing the potency of therapy by inhibiting new viral targets may result in a decrease in the number of latently infected cells and clearance of the latent reservoir. Addition of the fusion inhibitor T-20 to ART including reverse transcriptase inhibitors and protease inhibitors (PIs) may help achieve this goal. This study will evaluate whether treatment naive, chronically infected HIV patients treated with T-20 plus emtricitabine (FTC), ritonavir (RTV), saquinavir (SQV), and tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) have a measurable decline in the latently infected CD4 cell reservoir. Patients and their physicians may choose different PIs than RTV and SQV, but they will not be provided by the study.
Patients in this study will receive injections of T-20 twice daily in addition to oral FTC and TDF once daily and oral RTV and SQV twice daily. At Week 24, patients will have their latent cell reservoir sampled. Patients whose HIV viral loads are less than 50 copies/ml at or after Week 24 but prior to Week 48 will continue the treatment regimen through the end of the study; their latent cell reservoirs will be tested at Weeks 48, 72, and 96. Patients whose viral loads are between 50 copies/ml and 200 copies/ml will continue the treatment regimen and latent cell sampling, but their regimens may be intensified as determined by the study team. Patients whose viral loads are 200 copies/ml or greater after Week 24 may continue their study regimens, but will no longer contribute latent cell samples.
This study will last 96 weeks. During the first 4 months of the study, patients will have 7 study visits; after that, study visits will be every 8 weeks until the end of the study. Medical history, clinical assessments, and blood collection will occur at every study visit. Pill and ENF vial counts will be assessed, and patients will be asked to complete a medication adherence questionnaire at selected study visits.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
19 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal